It is observed that Most of the players go broke after retiring from the sport, but this did not happen to Shaquille O’Neal – a retired professional American basketball player. He also has mastered the business. The decision to pursue a degree was because of his fear that he might go broke once he retires from the sport. The same fear made him closely follow Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson, primarily how they invest their money.
Today, Shaq is known as Hall of Famer, wrestler, podcaster, sports analyst, and venture capitalist. It is intriguing to know that a sports person became a venture capitalist. Shaq endorses the fact that it is investing that made him wealthy from rich. Shaq had started investing in companies while he was still playing; he was already building his portfolio. He has investments in companies like Ring, Lyft, vitamin water, and Google.
It all did not happen all of a sudden, Shaq gradually learned the art of investment and started making the right investments. He missed his first investment opportunity because of no experience at all. Shaq was approached by the founder of the Idea lab to become an equity partner in one of his companies and become the face of the company, which Shaq rejected asking for cash instead. He did not understand the importance of equity at that time until he saw that some years later, the same company was worth lots of dollars, and the worth of his capital was much more than the cash.
Shaq’s learning from declining the equity offer and earnings up to $100 million by 2002 after winning three consecutive NBA championships, made him feel comfortable taking a smart risk. He believes his investment in Google was luck. He quoted; he met a top profile investor who was somehow linked to a kid who he was playing inside a restaurant. The high profile investor introduced him to the Google guys, who pitched him to become an equity investor. He knew it would be a wise decision to invest in Google as it was going to make the lives of people more relaxed, and he remembered Jeff Bezos saying that any investment made in a business that can make the world a better place is always a good investment. Thus, he invested. When Google went public, Shaq earned $15 for every $1 spent. At that point, he realized the actual worth of equity investment and that he could always use his celebrity status to buy equity in companies that are performing well and planning to go public shortly.
Down the years, Shaq became a serial investor. He also appeared in commercials for companies like Ring, Lyft, and Vitamin water as they offered him a lot of stock. Further, he realized that his association with companies like Ring would help double the positive impact of business on society because of his PR, links, and relationships. This also made him invest in companies. He also made a fortune when Amazon acquired Ring for $1 Billion.
Shaq continues to invest in companies and enjoys his
journey as a venture capitalist seeing his wealth multiply and grow.
Ashton Kutcher is one of Hollywood’s most plorific Silicon Valley investors. He has developed a lucrative investing career, from taking a bet on Uber and AirBnb early on and growing a $30 million fund into $250 million in 6 years.
Ashton Kutcher is one of the more lively Silicon Valley investor in Hollywood. From angel investing early on to co-founding 2 venture capital funds, Kutcher has built quite the bountiful investing career over the past ten years.
Kutcher, aged 41 has invested over $3 billion
in startups and taken part in 177 funding rounds over the past 10 years.
Kutcher and Oseary poured $1 million each of
their own money into the fund, while Burkle contributed $8 million. A-Grade
also received backing from experienced tech executives like Salesforce CEO Marc
Benioff and ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt, as well as businessman Mark Cuban.
Kutcher’s money hunger began at a young age. As a teen, he held down multiple jobs, such as lawn mowing, cleaning work, and dishwashing.
Kutcher told the investing blog “Grow” that he saved fourteen hundred dollars for a snowmobile at age 13. He said “I pitched in after school and on weekends for 18 months, and deposited every cent into a savings account.”
Brought up in Iowa, Kutcher comes from blue-collar genes. His father made a living at a meat-packing plant while his mother was a school teacher, Jackie Lam reported for Business Insider. Kutcher was studying biochemical engineering at the University of Iowa where he was scouted as a model, which eventually let to his breakthrough in the acting world.
Actor and model is just a few of the many caps he wears as part of a multi faceted career. Kutcher is not only a producer and entrepreneur he is also a philanthropist, with many ventures in every field. As well as being a rather serious investor.
Whilst not the 1st celebrity to make it in
investing, but over a decade in, Kutcher has made a brand for himself in
Silicon Valley. Bani Sapra for Business Insider referred to him as the most
active celebrity investor and, arguably, tinsel-town’s most knowledgeable tech
investor.
His vision is to help connect the
“everyday man” with new companies to solve everyday problems, Kutcher
began as an angel investor before co-founding two venture capital funds:
A-Grade Investments and Sound Ventures.
Concentrating on this basic goal of identifying and allowing top entrepreneurs to build a brighter tomorrow is the crux of my investment strategy,” Kutcher wrote in a blog post for Atrium, a legal and tech start-up.
“I spend a lot of time thinking about
new and simpler ways to do things, but I’m too short on time to execute on all
those ideas,” he told Grow. “So I found people who were executing on
them and invested in their success.”
In 2013 the Telegraph reported that Kutcher
is very drawn to consumer technologies. “The companies that will
ultimately succeed are the companies that chase happiness,” he advises.
“If you find a way to help people find love, or health, or friendship, the
dollar will chase that.”
Kutcher’s foray into angel investing kicked off when he founded production company Katalyst in 2000, which led to Silicon Valley connections.
Forbe’s reports that Kutcher poached
Katalyst’s digital chief from TechCrunch, the person that brought him to the
big names in Silicon Valley. “I spent all of my time just listening,”
Kutcher told him.
Kutcher soon became familiar with the tech
scene. In 2009, billionaire Marc Andreessen asked if he could invest $1 million
into Skype 2 years before Microsoft bought the company and tripled the value,
according to O’Malley Greenburg.
A-Grade focused on early-stage investments,
according to TechCrunch. O’Malley Greenburg wrote that these start-ups had to
have three defining characteristics: founders A-Grade wanted to work with; a
problem-solving mission statement that would make the most of time; and a
business model A-Grade could grow.
While there were a few failed investments along the way, such as BlackJet and Fab.com, A-Grade made many successful ones: $500,000 into Uber, $2.5 million into Airbnb, $3 million into Spotify, $300,000 into Warby Parker, and $1.5 million into Houzz, among many others. These are all multi-billion dollar companies today.
In 2015, Kutcher and Oseary took a more formal approach to venture investing, co-founding venture fund Sound Ventures with $100 million from Investing other people’s money instead of their own allowed “them to make bigger investments, invest in later-stage startups, and put more money into investments that raise follow-on rounds,” according to TechCrunch.
As of 2017, Sound Ventures was managing more
than $100 million in investments, reported Cat Zakrzewski for The Wall Street
Journal. By 2018, it had made over 50 investments and led six rounds of
financing.
Its portfolio includes Neighborly, a municipal bond crowdfunding startup, and OpenGov, a financial tech company for local governments.
The same year, Kutcher guest-judged on
investment show Shark Tank after Mark Cuban convinced him to audition.
Kutcher was originally hesitant about going
on, but felt it “might deliver the opportunity to bring an audience to the
show that might not normally watch it.
He ended up splitting a $200,000 investment with Shark Tank judge Lori Greiner for 15% each of Beebo, a shoulder strap that holds a baby bottle for optimal bottle-feeding. Kutcher has three rules when investing, all focused on what he sees in entrepreneurs.
The primary rule is that entrepreneurs must deeply understand both their product and their industry, he told A-Plus. They must also have a personality that will allow them to withstand failure and setbacks, he said.
Kutcher continued: “You can have the best idea in the world and absolute domain expertise and know how to do everything right, but if you want to do something great in the world, there are going to be obstacles; and you have to be a person who has ingenuity and sheer willpower to get through those times.”
The third rule, he added, is that the entrepreneur must get along well with him. “One of the critical tests that I try to run when I’m sitting across from a founder is: Can you sell me your idea?” Kutcher said at the conference.
For Kutcher, the ability to convey a
company’s mission determines whether or not they’ll be able to snag the best
talent in a competitive job market, Zoë Bernard reported for Business Insider.
He sees telling the story of an early stage company as integral to its future
growth.
“If you can’t sell me, how are you going
to sell your first hire, your second hire, your third hire?” Kutcher
asked. “How are you going to create the capacity for the rest of your team
to sell those next hires?”
On Chelsea Handler’s Netflix talk show
“Chelsea,” Kutcher offered up his best investment advice:
“Invest in the things that you know. If
you drink beer all the time — if you go to microbreweries and you try all kinds
of them — you probably know which ones are the best, and my advice is always to
invest in what you know.”
He also emphasized this in his interview with Grow, where one of his top three tips for deciding on what to invest in was to invest in your own expertise.
He likes to help out others by giving
investing advice such as invest in what you know, learn all you can about it,
and create a plan to make what you invested into a reality.
Kutcher said you should invest in what you
want to bring to life, but approach your vision carefully.
Kutcher told Grow you should invest in what you want to see become reality. “Worst-case scenario, you lose money — but at least you will get the life you want,” he said.
But for what you don’t know, he advises
“in Atrium blog” finding out everything you can about it. “Learn
what you don’t know.”
That involves asking stupid questions.
Kutcher advised doing just that at a recent QuickBooks Connect conference. He
said that when he was first introduced to key players in the tech world, he
would ask every question he could think of.
When it comes to implementing that reality,
Kutcher has said that while having a vision is important, making a plan is
better. At the QuickBooks Connect conference, he advised starting with what
you’ve done to work towards your vision or goal, then looking at what you can
do next to finally achieve your vision. In other words, nail out the
nitty-gritty details that get you from point A to B.
For his many investments, Kutcher said he
considers his relationships the best investment he’s made.
He told Grow, “Taking the time to get to
know people, what motivates them, what their challenges are,”?.
“These things are often overlooked. Investors get so wrapped up in returns
and numbers that they forget that the true privilege of their position is to
share a journey with exceptional people.”
His views on investing and life in general
all goes back to his Midwestern origins. He said he needs to give back to those
who need a helping hand.
At QuickBooks he said “I’m very appreciative of the things I have, I’m always fighting for the guy on the street, no matter what, because I always feel like I am the little guy. If you’re lucky enough to be doing well, it’s incumbent upon you to help folks who are struggling to grab that first rung on the ladder to start their climb.”
Gaius Chibueze & Crypto Currency
Gaius Chibueze is a little known crypto investor rarely mentioned in the public domain for this unassuming past of celebrity.
However Gaius was recently ranked amongst the
leading cryptocurrency traders in 2019 according to Binance traders rankings.
At 27 years old, Gaius Chibueze began an
obsession to meet all his 5,000 Facebook followers across the globe in person.
Well known as a champion for Blockchain
solutions, and ardent crypto educator, not many are aware that Gaius Chibueze
was once proudly entertaining audiences with rap music.
Mr Gaius’ history with rap music can be traced back to around 10 years ago as a student of College of Education, Akamkpa, Cross Rivers State .
Sosoflow, as he called himself, attended
every concert in Calabar, performing for rap fans, and of course earning a
living from it.
Channeling the same passion led him to invest
in his growing music record label business, Konvest Music, a label that now
houses budding music talents with unique sound and strong prospects.
Today, Mr Gaius Chibueze has deep interest in
many industries, and markets, and is heading a team of global change makers in
creating pertinent solutions to meet the demands of the ever mobile growing
young African population.
During recent years there have been an
increasing number of celebrities transforming into startup investors. These
stars have shown that their talent exceeds taking a great selfie in front of
the camera or on the field and they are ready to use their celebrity status and
power to increase their millions outside of their normal comfort zones. From
retail to aerospace to fitness, Indian celebrities are keen to own a pie in the
country’s startup ecosystem, both global and local.
Indian celebrities like Amitabh Bachchan have invested in “Edu’s Fun” and “Just Dial” , Virat Kohil has invested in “Wrogn” the gym chain “Chisel” and Convo and Indian Cricket Captain Run Adam has invested in Cars 24.
This phenomenon of celebrity investors isn’t a surprise or anything new, but the fact that the role and equity of a star are moving beyond brand ambassadors endorsing the product is an curious trend and one that is likely to expand in time.
A recent television interview with a group of startups about this growing trend of celebrity investors. The product advertising has been a lot easier by Facebook’s new initiative ‘Boost with Facebook’ empowering businesses across India with digital education to allow for their business growth.
Anything from retail, aerospace and fitness ,
Indians are keen to own a piece off the pie. Indians are investing their
millions into start up companies.
From local to global the start up companies are looking for celebrities to do more than endorse the products like men’s grooming products. The small and medium businesses are looking for big investors and to contribute to brand ideas.
Across the globe, there are approximately 90 million Small – Medium businesses (SMBs). In India, there is exceptional commitment to giving a boost to the SMB ecosystem. There are two sets of SMBs in India, where a fraction that know how to do business online, but the level of understanding is really small. Suprisingly there are SMB’s that haven’t come online yet, and are still learning the online world completely. For the first set of people who are already online, there are several programmes launched recently to support them. This includes the Venture Capital (“VC brand incubator”) that helps Facebook partner with VCs and as a result helps micro-business entrepreneurs skill, mentor, and train. Small businesses and startups who have small budgets can access various workshops where leaders from Facebook extend solutions that can enable them to grow and scale their business. Facebook recently also launched the SheLeadsTech programme exclusively to encourage women entrepreneurs. The programme has enabled 600 women entrepreneurs access to tools, mentorship, and resources to help overcome barriers, and build a successful business in technology.